Shades rises from the minds of Korova . The aim is at drawing new nuances in the immaginary spectrum of techno , to get the hearing closer to the sound of those hidden mechanical shadows . Shades lives on dark visions and primitive rhythms , but nevertheless trusts in a future controlled by a lightning plot between humans and technologies.

Noughts & Crosses. The roundness of the drum meets the crossing of the stick. The flame from the match ignites the BOOM from the wick. Drumz & Llingo’s Philly sound meets a New York trio with unmatched wits. KDP proudly introduces, Lewis Parker: UK native, SP technician, emcee extraordinaire with the golden sound. T.R.A.C: Flow artisan, boom bap blesser and Koncrete Jungle repper. John Robinson: The Linguistic surgeon, operating with scientific precision.Individually dynamic and collectively triumphant, John Robinson, TRAC and Lewis Parker display a unique abilityto come together and murder an absolutely meddlesome beat. The emcees provide unique and different styles while at the same time maintaining a cohesion rarely seen by actual multiple emcee rap groups. While not a group themselves, these individually accomplished emcees, have worked together in the past. Yet it is worthy to note that John Robinson, (previously known as Lil’ Sci from Scienz of Life) is reuniting with Lewis parker for the first time since their successful International Summers colab in 2010.The A side of this record is as hard as it gets. Drumz & Llingo continue to define the modern rugged east coastsound, and also show producers what a remix should sound like; via a B side that sounds like an entirely different song, that is equally as good as the original, but flipped on its head with a totally different feel. Learn from this. This is what a remix should be. KDP strikes gold again, this time with the help of Lewis Parker, TRAC and John Robinson.Tic-Tac-Toe that's three in a row ... let's go!

Constructed around a sunburned guitar lick of prominence, Phoenix bluesman George Bowman’s unreleased two-parter “Don’t Down Me People” is a lost document of Arizona’s underpublicized soul output. Simple in design, passionate in delivery, this blues-funk landmine from the late-’60s sits at the rarely traversed intersection of the J.B.s and the Band of Gypsys. This 45 contains canyons of wide-open drums, courtesy of Dyke and the Blazers original timekeeper, Rodney Brown.

Secure shopping at hhv.de:
Decorated by Trusted Shops, the only seal of quality with buyer protection.

Trusted Shops certifies online shops by carefully checking a set of quality criteria before awarding the European trustmark.
With the combination of Trusted Shop's money-back guarantee and the Customer reviews system you are able to order online with confidence.